You are a hardened drug baron, controlling a network of dealers. Presiding over an operation worth millions of pounds, you struggle with the problems associated with any enterprise, legal or otherwise n your supply, your staff, and, not least, how to deal with your ill-gotten gains. This last part is harder than it sounds. Unlike a conventional business, you cannot just pop to the bank n questions would be asked. Instead, you prefer to deal in cash, the only problem being what to do when the quantities become unfeasibly large. For the serious criminal, the discrepancy in volume between a car boot full of money or a bin bag brimming with notes can mean the difference between getting away with it and an extended jail term.
This is why a little-remarked-upon development in official policy on the denominations in which the euro is issued has sent shockwaves through the world of organised crime. Until last month, many British gangsters stored their spoils in the form of €500 notes. While £1m weighs 50kg in £20 notes, the same value weighs only 2.2kg in €500 notes. This has made life easier for a growing number of criminals, since the euro's introduction in 2002. Should you wish, for example, you can swallow €150,000 in €500 notes, or hide €20,000 of them a cigarette packet, while even £1m can be hidden quite easily in secret compartments in a suitcase.
However, fed up with abuse of the currency, Britain's Serious and Organised Crime Agency (Soca) has decided with the Treasury and Home Office to remove €500 notes from circulation in Britain. Soca's ban follows an investigation which revealed that 90 per cent of the €500 notes in this country are being used for criminal purposes. It's the latest of a number of high-denomination bank notes favoured by villains that have fallen out of favour. Richard Nixon halted the circulation of $10,000 bills in 1969 because of their association with organised crime; these days the 1,000 Swiss franc note, while rare, is another popular choice for those engaging in nefarious deeds, and the 1,000 Dutch guilder note was a black-market favourite before the introduction of the euro.
Soca's research showed that of the €500m worth of €500 notes brought to Britain each year, only 10 per cent were being used legitimately. The remaining €450m, it believes, are acquired by money-laundering operations before being passed on to criminals. "Soca has concluded that there is no credible legitimate use for the €500 note in the UK in the volumes currently supplied, and that easy access to them in the UK is a key enabler of criminal activity, allowing criminals operating here to move large volumes of cash effectively," a Soca spokesman said.
Since its introduction in 2002, economists have warned that the note would cause problems. A June 2009 report published by the Bank of Italy's financial intelligence unit stated: "Cash is the ideal tool for illegal payment and the movement of funds and the high-value banknote simplifies the logistical management of large sums of money." There have since been numerous busts involving seizures of large quantities of the note. Soca highlights a series of examples n details of which it has withheld n including that of a small London business that purchased €4m in €500 notes for onward sale. The store had a single outlet, but its demand for €500 notes exceeded that of a national bureau de change chain with 12,500 branches. In another three operations, Soca took €500 notes totalling €3m from a money-laundering group supplying several organised crime networks. "All these seizures were forfeited unopposed n in effect, the criminals preferred to forego €3m than risk the exposure of criminal activity by attempting to explain its origins and ownership," the Soca spokesman said.
In December two organised crime gang members, Anwar Hardi and Hasiv Rashid, were jailed for their involvement in the laundering of £24m. During an HM Revenue & Customs investigation, €526,000 in €500 notes was seized; at one point the criminals used cereal boxes to hide their funds. Some of the money was contaminated with drugs, suggesting it had been raised through the drugs trade.
The €500 note looks harmless, but it is packed with security measures, befitting of the second-highest value bank note in the world (behind the 1,000 Swiss franc note): it has a watermarks, a hologram strip, a reflective glossy stripe, a matted surface, bar codes, ultraviolet ink, perforations, raised printing, colour-changing ink and a serial number. The notes have gained the nickname the "Bin Laden", because people know they are out there but nobody ever sees them.
According to Colombian financial regulators, in 2006, euros valued at £200,000 were legally imported into Colombia. The same year, nearly £600m worth of euros were exported. The balance went undeclared, as importers paying for cocaine tend not to fill out currency declaration forms. Also in 2006, the Spanish government revealed that 25 per cent of all €500 notes in the world were in circulation in Spain, one of Europe's principle conduits for the import of cocaine. Today, of the €776bn in circulation, about €280bn are in €500 notes. The note's size and high value make transatlantic flights easy for criminals, who often travel in business class to get a higher weight limit for their hand luggage.
The phasing out of the note, which was instituted in late April but officially announced yesterday, is a muted victory for Soca, which admits that drug dealers might just start using the next-largest denomination of €200 notes. But it says the change at least frustrate criminals. "A €500 note is a comfortable choice so the first impact is that criminals will be moved out of their comfort zone," said the Soca spokesman.
- INDEPENDENT
Goodbye to the note of ill-repute
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